New York, July 6, 2005The Committee to Protect Journalists
is alarmed by an attack against Nikolai Kochurov, editor-in-chief of
Severodvinsk's independent newspaper, Severodvinsky Rabochy, who
was beaten by two unidentified assailants on June 28.
Kochurov remained hospitalized today with head and arm injuries after
being struck with a heavy object by assailants who were waiting in the
entry to his apartment building as the journalist left for work that
morning, according to several local news reports. Police in Severodvinsk,
a city in the Arkhangelsk region of northern Russia, opened a criminal
case but did not immediately identify suspects.
Investigators and colleagues said Kochurov's work was a possible motive
for the attack. A mobile phone, money, and other belongings were not
stolen, according to local news reports.
"Severodvinsky Rabochy demonstrates the wide spectrum of public
opinions," Olga Ovchinnikova, the paper's deputy editor-in-chief, told
CPJ in a telephone interview. "Some people could dislike negative information
toward them published in the media."
Kochurov did not tell his colleagues about any threats, Ovchinnikova
said, and Severodvinsky Rabochy had not published any recent
stories that were particularly controversial. The newspaper publishes
four days per week.
"This case needs to be investigated vigorously to combat the pervasive
climate of impunity for those who attack journalists in Russia," CPJ
Executive Director Ann Cooper said. At least a dozen journalists in
Russia have been murdered since 2000; no one has been brought to justice
in any of the slayings.
